Even weirder, is that it is in geosynchronous orbit, meaning it way out there at the 33,000 mile mark so it stays in a fixed position in our sky. Not much going on out there in the geo shells, they are all assigned spaces, so it's a lot less likely the satellite ran into something like it could in low Earth orbit.
Even weirder, is that it is in geosynchronous orbit, meaning it way out there at the 33,000 mile mark so it stays in a fixed position in our sky. Not much going on out there in the geo shells, they are all assigned spaces, so it's a lot less likely the satellite ran into something like it could in low Earth orbit.